Buoys Test Wind Speeds Offshore

Tuesday, September 16, 2014 @ 04:09 PM gHale

Two massive, 20,000-pound buoys decked out with the latest in meteorological and oceanographic equipment will enable more accurate predictions of the power-producing potential of winds that blow off U.S. shores.

The bright yellow buoys — each worth about $1.2 million — are being commissioned by the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Washington state’s Sequim Bay. Starting in November, they will deploy for up to a year at two offshore wind demonstration projects: One near Coos Bay, Oregon, and another near Virginia Beach, Virginia.

“We know offshore winds are powerful, but these buoys will allow us to better understand exactly how strong they really are at the heights of wind turbines,” said PNNL atmospheric scientist Will Shaw. “Data provided by the buoys will give us a much clearer picture of how much power can be generated at specific sites along the American coastline – and enable us to generate that clean, renewable power sooner.”

Offshore wind is a new frontier for U.S. renewable energy developers. There’s tremendous power-producing potential, but limited information is available about ocean-based wind resources. DoE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy purchased the buoys to improve offshore turbine performance in the near term and reduce barriers to private-sector investment in large-scale offshore wind energy development in the long term. AXYS Technologies, Inc., manufactured the buoys in Sydney, British Columbia.

One report estimated the U.S. could power nearly 17 million homes by generating more than 54 gigawatts of offshore wind energy, but there needs to be more information. Instruments have long measured wind speeds at the surface, but the blade tips of offshore wind turbines can reach up to 600 feet above the surface, where winds can behave very differently.

The buoys carry a bevy of advanced instruments, including devices called lidar, which is short for light detection and ranging, to measure wind speed and direction at multiple heights above the ocean. Other onboard instruments will record air and sea surface temperature, barometric pressure, relative humidity, wave height and period, and water conductivity. Researchers will also measure subsurface ocean currents with acoustic Doppler sensors.

All of these measurements will help scientists and developers better understand air-sea interactions and their impact on how much wind energy a turbine could capture at particular offshore sites. The data will also help validate the wind predictions derived from computer models, which have thus far relied on extremely limited real-world information.

PNNL is operating and managing the buoys for DoE. Researchers working from PNNL’s Marine Sciences Laboratory in Sequim, WA, will conduct initial tests on the custom-made buoys near the Dungeness Spit along the Strait of Juan de Fuca, a channel of water between Washington state’s Olympic Peninsula and British Columbia’s Vancouver island. Afterward, the buoys will work on project sites in Oregon and Virginia.